Islamabad, Jan 18 : Identifying tuberculosis 
patients in Africa using passive methods is leaving many cases undiagnosed, 
according to researchers from the Netherlands, Kenya and the United States, who 
studied case detection methods in HIV-prone western Kenya. Tuberculosis (TB) 
occurs commonly in men and women with HIV, but in these patients TB can be more 
difficult to detect.
The findings were published online ahead of the 
print edition of the American Thoracic Society's American Journal of Respiratory 
and Critical Care Medicine.
"Limited information exists on the prevalence 
of tuberculosis and the best methods of identifying TB patients in African 
populations with high rates of HIV," said study author Anja van't Hoog, MD, MSc, 
physician-researcher and epidemiologist, Academic Medical Centre, University of 
Amsterdam. "In this study, our goals were to estimate how many individuals have 
TB confirmed by bacteriological testing and the number of cases which occur 
along with HIV, as well as to evaluate case detection."
In passive 
detection, which has been the method predominantly used in Kenya and globally 
since the 1970s, diagnoses are made only after patients present to health 
clinics and report a prolonged period of coughing. Dr. van't Hoog, who conducted 
the study while serving as an epidemiologist at the Kenya Medical Research 
Institute, said more aggressive, intensive methods of detection are needed to 
help identify more cases, and identify them earlier.
"Previous studies 
have suggested that passive case finding might be adequate for TB control," she 
noted. "However, TB epidemiology has changed dramatically as a result of the HIV 
epidemic, and there is little information available regarding the prevalence of 
tuberculosis and the effectiveness of case-finding in African populations with 
high rates of TB and HIV."
The researchers recruited 20,566 adults from 
40 randomly sampled village clusters in a rural area of western Kenya and 
collected two sputum samples from each adult. Samples were evaluated using a 
smear microcopy test. Participants also were given questionnaires about their 
exposure to TB and nearly all participants agreed to undergo a chest X-ray. 
Those with abnormal X-ray findings or symptoms suggesting TB each provided an 
additional sputum sample for examination by sputum culture, a testing method 
which is much more sensitive than smear microscopy.
Following evaluation, 
123 participants were identified as having tuberculosis. TB prevalence was 
greater among men, those who had received prior TB treatment and those in the 
lowest socioeconomic level. HIV information was available for 101 of the 123 
TB-positive participants, of whom 51 percent were identified as being infected 
with HIV. The researchers estimated 48 percent of the undiagnosed burden of TB 
in the population is due to HIV.
Diagnosing TB earlier and more 
accurately can help prevent severe illness and death from TB, and reduce 
transmission of TB to other community members, Dr. van't Hoog said. Men and 
women with HIV infection are at much greater risk of getting TB, but the 
presentation of TB is more often atypical in patients with HIV, making diagnosis 
more difficult, she added.
"Most of the identified TB cases in this study 
would not have been identified by the current case detection approach, which 
includes symptom recognition, sputum smear microscopy and chest X-ray," Dr. 
van't Hoog noted. "Culturing sputum samples offers more accurate results, but is 
a more complicated, costlier procedure, making it largely unavailable in 
resource-limited settings.
"This study identified a considerable 
prevalence of infectious and largely undiagnosed pulmonary tuberculosis in 
western Kenya, where rates of HIV infection are high," she said. "The goals for 
TB control are unlikely to be met without continued improvements in case 
detection. Intensified case finding is required to control TB in this 
resource-limited, high HIV-prevalence setting, and future research should focus 
on ensuring these goals are met."
Ends
SA/EN
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More intensive methods needed to identify TB in HIV-prone populations
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